0% found this document useful (0 votes)
36 views12 pages

Notas de Clases SC0x - M2Unit1 - ManagingUncertainty

Zippy Bright manufactures electric toothbrushes and received weekly sales data for their product XP219 from three stores over a year. The document analyzes the sales data for store A. It presents the weekly sales numbers in a table and graphically as a histogram and probability mass function. It also defines key probability concepts like probability, events, and the four basic probability laws including conditional probability.

Uploaded by

Danilo Delgado
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
0% found this document useful (0 votes)
36 views12 pages

Notas de Clases SC0x - M2Unit1 - ManagingUncertainty

Zippy Bright manufactures electric toothbrushes and received weekly sales data for their product XP219 from three stores over a year. The document analyzes the sales data for store A. It presents the weekly sales numbers in a table and graphically as a histogram and probability mass function. It also defines key probability concepts like probability, events, and the four basic probability laws including conditional probability.

Uploaded by

Danilo Delgado
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 12

Managing Uncertainty I:

Probability and Discrete


Distributions

MIT Center for


Transportation & Logistics ctl.mit.edu
Zippy Bright
• Zippy Bright manufactures electric toothbrushes that are sold
through large retail outlets. Zippy Bright is concerned with
how variable the sales are at different stores. They requested
and received a year of weekly sales data on their premiere
product, the XP219, for three stores from one of their
retailers, Sellco.
• What can we say about the weekly sales in store A?
Week Unit Sales Week Unit Sales Week Unit Sales Week Unit Sales Week Unit Sales
1 1 11 3 21 2 31 1 41 2
2 5 12 2 22 4 32 2 42 3
3 3 13 3 23 4 33 3 43 3
4 2 14 4 24 3 34 4 44 3
5 3 15 2 25 4 35 5 45 4
6 3 16 1 26 1 36 5 46 1
7 3 17 3 27 2 37 1 47 2
8 2 18 4 28 3 38 5 48 3
9 5 19 4 29 4 39 5 49 4
10 2 20 3 30 4 40 1 50 2

MIT Center for


2
Transportation & Logistics
Zippy Bright – Graphing it out!

MIT Center for


3
Transportation & Logistics
Zippy Bright - Distributions
A histogram for the weekly sales.
Weekly Sales at Store A • A graphical representation of the distribution by mutually
20 exclusive and collectively exhaustive “bins” or intervals.
Number of Weeks

15 • Shows relative probability of each interval.


10

5
PMF of Weekly Sales at Store A
35%
0 30%
30%
1 2 3 4 5
25% 22% 22%
Sales per Week
20%
14%
15% 12%
10%

The Probability Mass Function 5%

• Probability of each discrete random variable 0%


1 2 3 4 5
• Probabilities sum to 100% or 1.00 Sales per Week

Probability Table Cumulative Distribution of Sales


100%
100% 88%
Cumulative 80%
Value Probability Probability 66%
60%
1 14% 14%
36%
2 22% 36% 40%
3 30% 66% 20% 14%
4 22% 88% 0%
MIT Center for
5 12% 100% 1 2 3 4 5
Sales per Week 4
Transportation & Logistics
Basic Probability Laws 1 & 2

MIT Center for


5
Transportation & Logistics
Basic Probability
• Probability Theory
n Mathematical framework for analyzing random events or experiments.
n Experiments are events we cannot predict with certainty, e.g., weekly sales!
• Notation Events:
n P(A) = probability that event A occurs, • A = “Sales = 5 units”
• B = “Sales ≥4 units”
w P(A)= 0.12
• C = “Sales are an Odd number”
w P(B)= P(4) + P(5) = 0.34 • D = “Sales are ≤2 units”
w P(C) = P(1) + P(3) + P(5) = .14 + .30 + .12 = 0.56
n P(A’) = complement of P(A) = probability some other event that is not A occurs
w P(A’)= 1 – P(A) = 0.88
w P(B’)= 1 – P(B) = 0.66
w P(C‘) = 1 – P(C) = 1 - 0.56 = 0.44
Cumulative • P(B U C) = P[(Sales≥4) OR (Sales =1,3,5)]
Value Probability Probability = P[Sales = 1, 3, 4, or 5] = 0.78
• P(B C) = P[(Sales≥4) AND (Sales =1,3,5)]
U
1 .14 .14
= P[Sales = 5] = 0.12
2 .22 .36
• P(A D) = P[(Sales=5) AND (Sales≤2)] = 0
U
3 .30 .66
• P(A U A’) = P[(Sales=5) OR (Sales≠5)] = 1.00
4 .22 .88
MIT Center for
5 .12Transportation &1.00
Logistics
Four Laws
Cumulative Events:
Value Probability Probability
1 .14 .14
• A = “Sales = 5 units”

of Probability 2 .22 .36 • B = “Sales ≥4 units”


3 .30 .66 • C = “Sales are an Odd number”
4 .22 .88 • D = “Sales are ≤2 units”
5 .12 1.00

1. Probability of any event is between 0 and 1


• P(Sales>6) = 0
0 ≤ P(A) ≤ 1 • P(1, 2, 3, 5)= 0.78
• P(Sales <6) = 1
• P(Sales < 1) = 0

2. If A and B are mutually exclusive events, then


P(A or B) = P(A U B) = P(A) + P(B)
• P(A U D) = P[(Sales=5) OR (Sales =1 or 2)]
= P(Sales=5) + P(Sales =1 or 2) = .12 + .36 = 0.48
• P(B U C) = P[(Sales≥4) OR (Sales =1,3,5)] = P[Sales = 1, 3, 4, or 5] = 0.78
≠ P(Sales≥4) + P(Sales =1,3,5)] = .34 + .56 = .90 why?????
MIT Center for
7
Transportation & Logistics
Basic Probability Laws 3 & 4

MIT Center for


8
Transportation & Logistics
Four Laws
Cumulative Events:
Value Probability Probability
1 .14 .14
• A = “Sales = 5 units”

of Probability 2 .22 .36 • B = “Sales ≥4 units”


3 .30 .66 • C = “Sales are an Odd number”
4 .22 .88 • D = “Sales are ≤2 units”
5 .12 1.00

Conditional Probability
P(A|B) = Probability that Event A occurs, GIVEN THAT Event B has occurred.
e.g., P(D|C) = P[(Sales≤2) Given That (Sales=1, 3, or 5)]

3. If A and B are any two events, then

P(D|C) = P[(Sales≤2) Given That (Sales=1, 3, or 5)] = P(Sales=1) / P(Sales=1, 3, or 5) = .14 / .56 = 0.25
P(A|B) = P[(Sales=5) Given That (Sales≥4) = P(Sales=5) / P(Sales≥4) = .12 / .34 = 0.35
P(B|A) = P[(Sales≥4) Given That (Sales=5) = P(Sales=5) / P(Sales=5) = .12 / .12 = 1.00

MIT Center for


9
Transportation & Logistics
Four Laws
Cumulative Events:
Value Probability Probability
1 .14 .14
• A = “Sales = 5 units”

of Probability 2 .22 .36 • B = “Sales ≥4 units”


3 .30 .66 • C = “Sales are an Odd number”
4 .22 .88 • D = “Sales are ≤2 units”
5 .12 1.00

Independence
A and B are independent if knowing that B occurred
does not influence the probability of A occurring

4. If A and B are independent events, then


P(A | B) = P(A)

Are Events C and A independent? Let’s test it!


• If P(C|A) = P(C) (that is the probability that sales are odd given that we sold 5 units),
then A and C are independent events.
• P(C|A) = P(C and A)/P(A) = P[(Sale=1, 3, or 5) and (Sales=5)] / P(Sales=5)
= P(Sales=5) / P(Sales=5) = 1.00
• Since this is not P(C) = 0.56, these are not independent events.
MIT Center for
10
Transportation & Logistics
Key Points

MIT Center for


11
Transportation & Logistics
Key Points
• Probability Laws
n Probability of any event is between 0 and 1 0 ≤ P(A) ≤ 1
n If A and B are mutually exclusive events, then
P(A or B) = P(A U B) = P(A) + P(B)
n If A and B are any two events, then

n If A and B are independent events, then

P(A | B) = P(A)

MIT Center for


12
Transportation & Logistics

You might also like

pFad - Phonifier reborn

Pfad - The Proxy pFad of © 2024 Garber Painting. All rights reserved.

Note: This service is not intended for secure transactions such as banking, social media, email, or purchasing. Use at your own risk. We assume no liability whatsoever for broken pages.


Alternative Proxies:

Alternative Proxy

pFad Proxy

pFad v3 Proxy

pFad v4 Proxy